Public Domain Poetry And Stories - The Thorn In The Flesh. by George MacDonald
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The Thorn In The Flesh.

    By George MacDonald



    Within my heart a worm had long been hid.
    I knew it not when I went down and chid
    Because some servants of my inner house
    Had not, I found, of late been doing well,
    But then I spied the horror hideous
    Dwelling defiant in the inmost cell--
    No, not the inmost, for there God did dwell!
    But the small monster, softly burrowing,
    Near by God's chamber had made itself a den,
    And lay in it and grew, the noisome thing!
    Aghast I prayed--'twas time I did pray then!
    But as I prayed it seemed the loathsome shape
    Grew livelier, and did so gnaw and scrape
    That I grew faint. Whereon to me he said--
    Some one, that is, who held my swimming head,
    "Lo, I am with thee: let him do his worst;
    The creature is, but not his work, accurst;
    Thou hating him, he is as a thing dead."
    Then I lay still, nor thought, only endured.
    At last I said, "Lo, now I am inured
    A burgess of Pain's town!" The pain grew worse.
    Then I cried out as if my heart would break.
    But he, whom, in the fretting, sickening ache,
    I had forgotten, spoke: "The law of the universe
    Is this," he said: "Weakness shall be the nurse
    Of strength. The help I had will serve thee too."
    So I took courage and did bear anew.
    At last, through bones and flesh and shrinking skin,
    Lo, the thing ate his way, and light came in,
    And the thing died. I knew then what it meant,
    And, turning, saw the Lord on whom I leant.



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